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Unsupervised Clustering of Missense Variants in HNF1A Using Multidimensional Functional Data Aids Clinical Interpretation.

Authors :
Althari, Sara
Najmi, Laeya A.
Bennett, Amanda J.
Aukrust, Ingvild
Rundle, Jana K.
Colclough, Kevin
Molnes, Janne
Kaci, Alba
Nawaz, Sameena
van der Lugt, Timme
Hassanali, Neelam
Mahajan, Anubha
Molven, Anders
Ellard, Sian
McCarthy, Mark I.
Bjørkhaug, Lise
Njølstad, Pål Rasmus
Gloyn, Anna L.
Source :
American Journal of Human Genetics. Oct2020, Vol. 107 Issue 4, p670-682. 13p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Exome sequencing in diabetes presents a diagnostic challenge because depending on frequency, functional impact, and genomic and environmental contexts, HNF1A variants can cause maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY), increase type 2 diabetes risk, or be benign. A correct diagnosis matters as it informs on treatment, progression, and family risk. We describe a multi-dimensional functional dataset of 73 HNF1A missense variants identified in exomes of 12,940 individuals. Our aim was to develop an analytical framework for stratifying variants along the HNF1A phenotypic continuum to facilitate diagnostic interpretation. HNF1A variant function was determined by four different molecular assays. Structure of the multi-dimensional dataset was explored using principal component analysis, k-means, and hierarchical clustering. Weights for tissue-specific isoform expression and functional domain were integrated. Functionally annotated variant subgroups were used to re-evaluate genetic diagnoses in national MODY diagnostic registries. HNF1A variants demonstrated a range of behaviors across the assays. The structure of the multi-parametric data was shaped primarily by transactivation. Using unsupervised learning methods, we obtained high-resolution functional clusters of the variants that separated known causal MODY variants from benign and type 2 diabetes risk variants and led to reclassification of 4% and 9% of HNF1A variants identified in the UK and Norway MODY diagnostic registries, respectively. Our proof-of-principle analyses facilitated informative stratification of HNF1A variants along the continuum, allowing improved evaluation of clinical significance, management, and precision medicine in diabetes clinics. Transcriptional activity appears a superior readout supporting pursuit of transactivation-centric experimental designs for high-throughput functional screens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00029297
Volume :
107
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
American Journal of Human Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
146148763
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2020.08.016